What 20% Down Actually Gets You

Putting 20% down on a home purchase:

  1. Eliminates PMI — avoids an extra 0.5–1.5% annual cost
  2. Reduces your monthly payment — you are borrowing less
  3. Reduces total interest paid — smaller loan, less interest over time
  4. May improve your rate — lenders offer marginally better rates with more skin in the game
  5. Creates immediate equity buffer — protection against minor price declines

These are real benefits. The question is whether achieving 20% justifies the tradeoffs — particularly the time cost.


The PMI Cost Calculation

PMI on a $350,000 home with 10% down ($315,000 loan):

  • PMI rate: ~0.7% of loan amount annually
  • Annual PMI: ~$2,205
  • Monthly PMI: ~$184

PMI is removed when you reach 20% equity based on original purchase price. On a standard 30-year mortgage, that typically happens around year 9–11 through normal amortization. You can request cancellation earlier with a new appraisal showing the home’s current value has appreciated to where you have 20% equity (LTV of 80%).

Total PMI cost under standard amortization: ~$2,000/year × ~10 years = ~$20,000

This sounds large — but compared to the alternative of waiting several more years to save the additional down payment, the math often still favors buying sooner with PMI.


The Wait-vs-Buy Comparison

Scenario: You have $35,000 saved. A home costs $350,000.

  • $35,000 = 10% down — you can buy now with PMI
  • $70,000 = 20% down — you need $35,000 more; at $12,000/year savings rate, that is ~3 more years

What happens in 3 years of waiting in a flat/modest market:

  • PMI avoided: ~$6,000 (3 years of $2,000/year)
  • Estimated home price appreciation (3% annually for 3 years): ~$32,000
  • Net position of waiting: you paid $35,000 extra to buy and avoided $6,000 in PMI = -$29,000 vs. buying now

In an appreciating market, delaying to avoid PMI usually costs more than the PMI itself.

Where waiting makes sense: Markets that are flat or declining, or buyers who are only 12–18 months away from 20% and can save aggressively.


Down Payment Options by Loan Type

Loan Type Minimum Down Payment PMI Equivalent Notes
Conventional 3–5% PMI required under 20% Best rates with 20% down
FHA 3.5% MIP for life (loan) MIP does not auto-cancel on recent loans unless you refinance
VA 0% None Veterans/military; excellent terms
USDA 0% Annual fees apply Rural areas only; income limits

Note on FHA MIP: FHA mortgage insurance premium (MIP) behaves differently from conventional PMI. For FHA loans with less than 10% down, MIP lasts for the life of the loan — it does not terminate automatically when you reach 20% equity. This is a meaningful cost difference vs. conventional PMI.


The Post-Purchase Reserve Rule

An often-cited guideline: After closing, you should have at least 3–6 months of living expenses remaining.

This means the down payment choice is constrained by:

  • How much cash you have available
  • Minus closing costs (2–3% of purchase price)
  • Minus post-purchase emergency reserve

Example:

  • Total savings: $80,000
  • Home price: $350,000
  • Closing costs: ~$8,750 (2.5%)
  • Post-close reserve target: ~$15,000 (4 months at $3,500 essential expenses)
  • Available for down payment: $80,000 − $8,750 − $15,000 = $56,250 (16% down)

At 16% down, you would pay PMI for approximately 2–4 years until hitting 20% equity. That is a manageable cost for a financially sound purchase.


Related: How Much House Can I Really Afford? · Is PMI Worth It? · Is It Better to Rent or Buy?

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy